APPENDIX.
Appendix, No. 1.
(Note.-The Figures in the Margin refer to the Pages in the Printed Report and Evidence.)
[iii]
By The Lords Committees appointed a Select
Committee to inquire into the present State of the Affairs
of The East India Company, and into the Trade between
Great Britain, the East Indies and China; and to report to
the House; and to whom were referred certain Petitions and
Papers and Accounts on the Subject of the said Matters
submitted to their Consideration;
ORDERED TO REPORT,
The Committee have met, and they first directed their Attention
to the Situation of the Territorial Finances of India, and examined
the Accountant General and the Auditor General of The East
India Company, with the view of placing upon their Minutes a
concise Statement of the Financial Results of the Years which
have elapsed since the Commencement of the existing Charter:-
showing the Manner in which the Deficiency of the Territorial
Revenues has been supplied, the Extent to which they have received direct and indirect Assistance from the Commercial Resources
of The East India Company, the present Inadequacy of these
Revenues to meet the Charges, and the Amount in which the
Charges are expected to be diminished in future Years by the
various Reductions of Civil and Military Establishments which
either have been actually effected or are now in progress.
The Committee likewise inquired into the Official Constitution
of the local Governments, for the Purpose of ascertaining whether
there be due Controul over the Expenditure of the several Departments, and whether Power be so distributed as to secure the
individual Responsibility of the several Officers employed.
It was necessarily a Subject of primary Importance to know
the various Modes of assessing and collecting the Land Revenue;
the comparative Advantages of the different Kinds of Revenue
Settlement; how far the Pressure of this Impost be equally distributed; whether, in certain Districts, it may not constitute so
large a Proportion of the Produce of the Soil as to be injurious to
Agricultural Industry; and whether, under the peculiar Circumstances of India, it be possible or expedient to introduce into that
Country Taxation of an indirect Character.
The Committee extended their Inquiries into the Revenue
Arrangements of such Native States as have enjoyed a good
Administration, for the Purpose of comparing these Arrangements with the several Systems practised under the British Government.
[iv]
The Nature and Operation of the Monopolies of Opium and of
Salt, and of the internal Duties of Transit, have likewise been
investigated.
The Monopoly of Opium attracted more particularly the Attention of the Committee, in consequence of the recent Abrogation of
the Opium Treaties which had been entered into with the Princes
of Malwa.
They were desirous of forming an Opinion as to the Effect
which would be produced upon the Revenue by the Freedom thus
given to the Opium Trade of Central India, which finds its Way
to the Indus through Territories not under the Rule of the British
Government.
It became naturally a Subject of Inquiry whether a larger
Amount of Revenue might not be derived from Salt, by issuing a
larger Quantity to the People at a lower Price, and whether a
Commutation of the Transit Duties might not be effected, which
would give entire Liberty to the internal Commerce of India.
The chief Manufactures of India having been supplanted to a
great Extent by the Manufactures of England, not only in the
Market of this Country, but in that of India itself, it had become
an Object of the deepest Interest to improve the Productions of the
Soil: The Committee therefore instituted a full Inquiry into the
Quality of the Silk and of the Cotton of India, and into the
Measures which might be adopted for their Improvement: They
likewise made Inquiries as to Sugar, Tobacco and other Articles of
Indian Produce.
In the Course of this Investigation they were led to inquire how
far the Residence of Europeans in India, for the Prosecution of
Commercial Objects, had been productive of Benefit; and whether
it would be expedient to remove all Restrictions upon such Native
Subjects of His Majesty as may desire to establish themselves in
the Interior.
The first Question which presented itself was, under what Law
such Englishmen should be placed; and the Committee made
Inquiries from retired Judges of the Supreme Courts, and from
other equally competent Persons, as to that important and
difficult Question, and generally as to the Mode of distributing
Justice, and as to the Laws and Regulations under which it is
administered.
They inquired whether the Judicial Functions were exercised in
the Provinces by Persons possessing a competent Knowledge of the
Law; what Means of acquiring that Knowledge were within the
Reach of the Company's Servants, and what Means existed for
preserving it amongst the Natives. They obtained much Information upon all Matters connected with the Police of the Country
and with the Administration of Justice; and they regarded with
particular Interest the Evidence as to the Fitness of the Natives for
the Discharge of Judicial Functions in the several Capacities of
Judges, Assessors and Jurymen.
[v]
The general Fitness of the Natives for Civil Employment has
been the Subject of anxious Inquiry, in the Hope that it might be
found practicable to raise them to higher Stations in the Service
than any they have hitherto enjoyed, and thus to elevate their Character, and give to the Country a cheaper and a more popular
Government.
With this View it became necessary to inquire into the Means of
Native Education; and Evidence was obtained, not only as to this
Point, but as to the best Mode of educating the European
Servants of The East India Company, both in England and in
India.
A Gentleman deputed by the Half-castes of Calcutta was heard
in Explanation of the peculiar Position in which the Class to which
he belongs is placed under the existing Law.
General Information has been obtained as to the State of the
Country now and in former Times, and as to the Condition of the
People; and particular Inquiry was made into the Extent and
Nature of the State of Slavery as it exists in Malabar and in other
Parts of India.
The Practice of Suttee, with regard to which some Opinions
were offered, is now abolished in the Presidencies of Bengal and
Madras.
Having examined the Gentlemen now in England who seemed
most competent to afford Information as to the State of India now,
and during the Period under their Review, the Committee proceeded to inquire into the Manner of conducting, and into the
Profits of, the Trade with China. They were desirous of comparing the Conduct of that Trade by the Americans and by the
Officers of the Company's Ships with its Conduct by the Company's Servants at Canton, and of comparing likewise the Charge
of Freight now borne by the Americans with that borne at present
by the Company, and with that which would be incurred by Private
Merchants of England. They thought it particularly expedient to
inquire into the Result of that Portion of the Trade with China
which has been carried on by the Americans in the Export of
British Manufactures, and to contrast it with the Result of similar
Exports made by The East India Company.
It was likewise necessary to inquire what Quantity of British
Manufactures had been imported into China by means of the
Country Trade, either directly from India, or from the free Port of
Sincapore, and what had been the Result of any such Importations.
Another Subject of Inquiry has been, whether, in the event of
the Trade being opened, the British Merchant would be enabled
to engage in it with greater Advantage than the Americans.
[vi]
Endeavours have been made to ascertain whether, in the event
of any considerable Extension of the Exports to China, profitable
Returns could be obtained in Tea and in other Articles of Chinese
Produce; but particularly whether a much larger Quantity of Tea
could be obtained at Canton of the same Quality as that now
furnished to the Company, without occasioning a proportionate
Increase of Price.
The comparative Statement at Page 509 of the Evidence shows
the Relation which the Price of Tea sold at the Company's Sales
bore in the last Year to that of Tea of the same Quality sold on
the Continent of Europe and in America.
How far the Trade of Foreign Nations now derives Advantage
from the Influence of The East India Company with the Authorities at Canton, and whether without that Influence the apprehended
Exactions of the Chinese Authorities and of the Monopolists of the
Hong could be so resisted as to secure the Continuance of a profitable Commerce, are Questions into which much Inquiry has been
made.
The Nature of the Country Trade, and the great Extension of
that Part of it which consists in the illegal Import of Opium into
China, have been likewise the Subjects of Investigation.
It has appeared to the Committee to be particularly important to
obtain Information and Opinions as to the Effect which the present
Restrictions upon the Trade with China produce, not only upon
the direct Trade between this Country and Canton, but upon the
valuable and increasing Trade of the East to which they have just
adverted.
The Committee have not considered it necessary to make a
Statement of the different Opinions they have received in Evidence
upon these several Points, as the full Index which will be formed
to all the Evidence given under these and other Heads of minor
Importance will enable the House to refer without Difficulty to the
whole Information which has been obtained upon each distinct
Subject of Inquiry.
The House not having required from them an Opinion upon the
great and complicated Questions which were submitted to their
Investigation, the Committee have thought it most advisable to confine themselves to a Statement of the Manner in which they have
endeavoured to perform the Duty of Inquiry which was imposed
upon them.
The Committee have added in an Appendix the most important
of the Papers and Accounts which have been submitted to their
Consideration.